The Humanism of Milton's Paradise Lost"The great divide in commentary on Paradise Lost is between historical and critical analysis. In his discussion of the poem, David Reid combines both approaches, at once placing it historically in terms of neoclassical humanism, and reflecting on it critically as a late twentieth-century humanist." "As a historian, Reid argues that Paradise Lost shares in the cultural effort of neoclassical humanism, and yet, in its picture of volition, the poem stands apart from it - Milton's understanding of freedom, error and guilt owing more to his Protestant than to his humanist concerns. And as a critic, Reid argues that surprisingly Milton's religious understanding speaks more directly to our humanism than his splendid articulation of neoclassical humanist themes."--BOOK JACKET.Title Summary field provided by Blackwell North America, Inc. All Rights Reserved |
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Page 79
... obedience and Satan disobedience . In between , on the human level , exemplify- ing the capacity of the will for either obedience or disobedience , stand ( or fall ) Adam and Eve . It is surely impossible to deny that this is in outline ...
... obedience and Satan disobedience . In between , on the human level , exemplify- ing the capacity of the will for either obedience or disobedience , stand ( or fall ) Adam and Eve . It is surely impossible to deny that this is in outline ...
Page 84
... obedience ) and freedom from constraint . The divisive principle issues in free obedience . The setting - apart of the fruit of the tree of knowledge is the division that completes the creation and sets it free in the wills of Adam and ...
... obedience ) and freedom from constraint . The divisive principle issues in free obedience . The setting - apart of the fruit of the tree of knowledge is the division that completes the creation and sets it free in the wills of Adam and ...
Page 166
... obedience to the will of God makes men happy , and that disobe- dience makes them miserable'.1 Yet even if Paradise Lost does illustrate this moral ( can one deny that Paradise Lost is didactic or that it enjoins obedience ? ) , the ...
... obedience to the will of God makes men happy , and that disobe- dience makes them miserable'.1 Yet even if Paradise Lost does illustrate this moral ( can one deny that Paradise Lost is didactic or that it enjoins obedience ? ) , the ...
Common terms and phrases
Absalom and Achitophel Adam and Eve Adam's angels Armida Arminian Augustan Bondage Book choice Christian Doctrine Christian humanism concerns corruption creation creaturely culture death despair divine Dryden earth earthly eloquence Empson Erasmus Erasmus's Essays Eve's evil experience Faerie Queene fall fallen feel forbidden knowledge freedom from constraint fruit God's heaven heavenly hell heroic human action human finitude human nature ideal imitation imagination innocence invocation involved Jerusalem Delivered John Dryden judgement light lines literary literature London looks Luther means Middlemarch Milton Milton's treatment mind moral ideas motions neoclassical epic neoclassical humanism neoclassical humanist Paradise Lost Petrarch philosophy poem poet poetry prohibition Raphael rational reason religious Renaissance Renaissance humanism Renaissance humanists rhetorical Rinaldo Satan scheme scholastic scholasticism schoolmen seems sense serpent shows sort soul speaks spirit suggests talk Tasso temperance theology thought turns understanding unfallen universal Valla virtues and vices volition